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by sp332 1006 days ago
Still over 100 deaths per day in the US. And those are official numbers, certainly an undercount.
2 comments

2400 die every day from heart disease in the US, but those who are still terrified of Covid today generally aren't allocating 24x of their fear budget towards heart disease and starting a regular running habit or improving their diet to flatten that curve.

Life belongs to those who learn proper fear prioritization.

I'm not talking about a fear budget, I'm talking about actual money. In 20 years we had SARS, MERS, ebola, H1N1, and then SARS 2. It makes no sense to shut down a program that keeps an eye on potential pandemics.
heart attacks don't spread in enclosed spaces
No, but they do spread via memetic infection of cultural norms that direct us as individuals to adopt unhealthy lifestyles.
which is certainly a problem worth solving, but it's still a different issue than a highly infectious disease that can be spread on elevators buses
I hate it when I catch an avoidable memetic infection from somebody a couple seats behind me on a plane because of the relaxed memetic infection rules.
Who cares? Everyone has been vaccinated at this point unless you're so deluded from reality you missed the vaccination campaigns in every country on Earth.
A few years ago I got the 'rona and recovered. A few weeks later I went to doctor who got me blood test to confirm antibodies. He wrote letter stating I had it, I fully recovered, and the vaccines are not recommended. On a lark I got another antibody blood test recently and the markers are as strong as the first blood test - no waning.
We haven't been over excess mortality since January according to the CDC. People will always be dying of something, today it's with covid.
Do they account for the covid deaths during the pandemic? Since a lot of vulnerable people died early, the number of deaths due to other causes like heart attacks, cancer, old age, diabetes etc. would be lower now than if covid never had happened.
I mostly look at the total deaths as a benchmark. The way they counted covid deaths changed and had new financial incentives which impacts numbers. Also, I would personally question the early accuracy of false/positive covid testing.

The numbers you suggest gets complicated by the fact that many people delayed care due to fear of leaving their houses, much less going to a covid-infested hospital.

How often do they update their baseline?
Their website has their charts and methodology pointing out the good and bad:

https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/excess_deaths.htm...